Monday, October 26, 2009


THE PANAMA PERSPECTIVE
OCTOBER 2009
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PANAMA IS IN THE INTERNATIONAL NEWS AGAIN - Panama will have Latin America's highest GDP growth in the five-year period starting next year, while Venezuela will have the lowest, according to a Latin Business Chronicle analysis of new forecasts from the International Monetary Fund.

My friend and Editor-in-Chief, Joachim Bamrud publishes one of the best sources for important events in Latin America. Latin Business Chronicle is the one-stop source on Latin America's business, technology and politics. With his permission, I bring you this part of this very well written and important forecast for Panama.


Wednesday, October 07, 2009
Growth Champions 2010-14: Panama, Peru
Panama, here represented by capital Panama City, will likely see the highest economic growth in Latin America in the 2010-14 period. (Photo: DSaso)
Mexico will outperform Brazil the next five years, while Panama will lead Latin America in GDP growth, the IMF forecasts.


BY CHRONICLE STAFF

Panama will have Latin America's highest GDP growth in the five-year period starting next year, whileVenezuela will have the lowest, according to a Latin Business Chronicle analysis of new forecasts from the International Monetary Fund.

Other growth stars include Peru, theDominican Republic and Chile. On the opposite end, top losers includeEcuador, Honduras and Argentina, our analysis shows.

LATIN AMERICAN GROWTH

All in all, Latin America is expected to grow by an average of 3.8 percent in the five-year period 2010-14. That’s higher than the world average of 3.3 percent. It will also be considerably better than the expected growth rates in developing markets like the United States (2.3 percent), Canada (2.7 percent), United Kingdom (2.4 percent), Germany (1.4 percent) and Japan(2.0 percent). And while Latin America will lag other emerging areas like Africa and the Middle East, it will outperform Central- and Eastern Europe.

Panama will grow an average of 6.1 percent in the period 2010-14. Peru follows with 5.6 percent growth in the same period.

While Panama and Peru have been the growth stars in Latin America the past few years, the five-year outlook going forward also includes countries like the Dominican Republic and Chile. The Dominican economy – the largest in the CAFTA trade block -- should grow by an average of 5.2 percent, while that of Chile will likely expand by 4.9 percent in the five-year period through 2014.

Sources: International Monetary Fund (World Economic Outlook, October 2009), Latin Business Chronicle (calculation of average 2010-14).

Friday, October 23, 2009

What it’s Really Like to Expatriate

By Mark Nestman

There are a lot more former U.S. citizens than there once were. Americans fed up with paying tax—and their government—are voting with their feet. And they're doing it in much greater numbers than ever before.
Why might you wish to give up your U.S. citizenship? Primarily, because doing so is the only way that you can eliminate your lifetime obligation to pay U.S. taxes, no matter where you live.
But expatriation is a major decision. It means, for instance, that you no longer have the automatic right to enter or live in the United States. You'll need to get a visa to do so, unless your non-U.S. passport qualifies you for visa-free entry. In all cases, the Department of Homeland Security can deny you re-entry to the United States, and is under no obligation to tell you why.
However, the actual process of expatriation isn't as arduous as you might think.
You're likely to encounter bureaucratic incompetence, unexplained delays, and rampant stupidity. But giving up your U.S. nationality is a legal right; one that even the inane employees of the Department of State understand.
Here's one account my colleague Bob Bauman recently received from a now-former U.S. citizen on how the expatriation process really works:
As you wrote, the first step is to find alternative citizenship. After attending a Sovereign Society meeting, I decided that my best bet was to gain citizenship in St. Kitts & Nevis by purchasing a property there for an amount over $350,000. Then, I paid another $50,000 for two additional family members to apply for citizenship. This whole process, including closing on the property, application, review of paperwork, citizenship, then waiting for issuance of the passport, took about nine months.
After moving all of my assets whose title I could change or move offshore, I purchased a home and moved to Panama. Then it came time to surrender my citizenship. From everything I could find on-line or in any books, I was expecting the surrender process to be rather grueling, including meeting one on one with a consular official sitting me under a bright light, interrogating me about reasons and taxes, then almost beating me with a rubber hose. We are all aware of the onerous threats of what IRS can do if we have the nerve to try to escape the plantation.
Bob, I was absolutely dumbfounded at how EASY it really was.
No problems, no questions about anything, they were simply willing to cut me free. I had thought I wanted an attorney with me, so I would have some idea which questions I legally had to answer and which I could refuse to answer. It was just not necessary. I believe IRS and the State Department tries to scare the hell out of us so we won't even try to surrender citizenship, but the process is far different than I envisioned.
There are a total of five forms needed. All are available on-line on the State Department Web site. The numbers for these forms are DS-4079 through DS-4083. You complete these forms, and then take them along with your U.S. passport, birth certificate, Social Security card and new passport to the embassy. If you are smart, you will also bring a typed letter explaining your reason for wanting to expatriate.
Do not say ANYTHING about taxes. My reasons were that I abhorred socialism, loved the Constitution, but was unbelievably sorry that we no longer followed it. Then a clerk will re-type all the forms. This took about two hours because of numerous typographical errors. It is important to proofread every answer and every single line. It took something like 10-12 different efforts to get all five forms finally completed correctly.
A consular representative then came to the window, asked for my U.S. passport, asked me if I was really the person who wanted to expatriate, and whether I understood the consequences. Then he signed a few papers, took my passport and said good-bye. That was it!
Oh, he also told me I should contact the IRS to inform them of what I had done. He said I would receive my certificate of loss of nationality in about four months. He never asked me ANYTHING about taxes or finances.
After a follow-up call to the embassy four months later, I was told I could return and pick up my official certificate of loss of nationality. They returned my U.S. passport with holes punched in it. The next day I returned to the embassy to apply for a 10-year, unlimited visit VISA to come to the United States. It was approved the same day. I also applied for Social Security because I was now old enough to receive it. You do NOT surrender your right to Social Security benefits by expatriating.
I thought it might be helpful for you to know what they ACTUALLY do to those who wish to surrender citizenship. Regardless of how intimidating they want you to believe this process can be, at least in my case, NOTHING happened.
I am now a free, sovereign citizen of the world. St. Kitts & Nevis charges me zero income tax, zero capital gains tax, and zero death tax. I don't even have to file a tax return any longer for ANYONE. Panama leaves me alone, so long as I pay my property tax and sales tax, and the U.S. no longer "owns" me.
My St. Kitts & Nevis passport gets me almost anywhere in the world that I could have gone with my former U.S. passport. With my 10-year visa, I can come back to visit the U.S. whenever I want. Believe me, I don't want or need to come back very often, and there are lots of nice other places to see in this world. And, if we are both on the same plane hijacked by terrorists, they'll kill you long before me.
I have the very best of all worlds. I live virtually tax-free in a beautiful country. I actually have more freedom and liberty as a guest resident of Panama than I did as a citizen of the United States.
I simply don't understand why there are not MILLIONS of Americans giving up their citizenship. If only they knew how EASY it is, how practical it is and how much better for their financial health, there would be lines around the block at every U.S. embassy from those who realize there are better choices than remaining a citizen of the USA.

Monday, July 13, 2009

Businessweek-Why Panama is the new Florida

Panama's quality health care, low costs, and proximity to the states are attracting American professionals as a retirement haven


Prospective retirees: Panama wants you. The pitch? A plane ride just 21/2 hours from Miami enables the newly poor to swap a wretched retirement in the U.S. for one befitting a royal in the balmy Central American nation. Cash out! Emigrate! Feel rich! Panama—the new Florida.

Spin aside, Panama is increasingly popular among retirement-age types looking to hedge against—or skip out on—the recession. The Migration Policy Institute, a Washington-based think tank that studies the movement of people around the world, says the chief factors prodding professional-class Americans to flock to Panama include its First World health care available at Third World prices and the country's pensioner program, which offers some of the deepest retiree discounts in Latin America. Seniors get up to half off on nearly everything, including movies, motels, doctors' visits, plane tickets, professional services, and electric bills. Expats also pay no tax in Panama on foreign income. Nor are they required to pay property tax for the first 20 years.

Thursday, May 7, 2009

Panama Property to see Accelerating Growth by August 2009-04-30


Property Abroad

The country has been unaffected by the credit crunch, and the property market kept afloat by undeterred American retirees. Because of this, prices are largely un-dented, and transaction volumes remain steady, said emerging markets analyst Julie Liddle, a spokesperson for the portal.

"Panama property is still selling at a steady rate to American retirees and lifestyle buyers. Prices have been largely unaffected by the global downturn, because there has hardly been a downturn. Around the world people are realising that property investment opportunities still exist abroad”, she explained.

"At the same time, Brits and Europeans tire of the abysmal interest rates and look at the better returns on offer from properties, and the latter will be further spurred on by the strengthening of the Pound. We predict that all this will evolve into a perfect storm, pushing investors to buy in the hottest markets in the next 2-4 months; and Panama will be high on that list," she finished.

Property Abroad.com is currently advertising dozens of properties for sale in Panama, with prices starting from £41,000. Unlike many other UK based portals, Property Abroad doesn't just have off plan property, and not only property in the cities, the portal has dozens of resale properties, properties in the major cities, and throughout the rural areas of Panama. The portal even has a selection of commercial opportunities, prices up to £10million.

About Property Abroad

Property Abroad is rapidly growing into one of the best known, trusted and most successful overseas property portals in the U.K. With a slick dynamic site and very reasonable rates Property Abroad currently has among the most extensive worldwide property listings on the net.

Panama's economy grew 2.59 percent in February 2009-04-23


Thomson Reuters

PANAMA CITY, April 23 (Reuters) - Panama's economy slowed dramatically in February to grow at a 2.59 percent rate from the same month a year earlier as the global economic crisis bit, the government said on Friday.

Fueled by luxury apartment construction, U.S.-Asia trade through the Panama Canal and a robust banking sector, Panama's dollarized economy led Latin America with near or above double-digit growth the last two years.

Analysts expect 2009 growth to fall to 3 percent or less as credit dries up, canal traffic drops and activity in Panama's large Caribbean free-trade zone slows.

'Panama has enjoyed extraordinary performance during the last six years and especially in the last two years the economy has had an accelerated and maybe even overheated growth,' said Domingo Latorraca, a consultant at Deloitte and former vice minister of economy.

April government reports showed new construction starts were down, stoking fears of a spike in unemployment, which so far remains near historical lows.

A $5 billion expansion of the canal that cranks into full gear later this year, as well as plans by both leading candidates for Panama's presidency to push infrastructure and housing projects, could mitigate job losses, analysts say.

'In Panama a crisis does not exist at this moment,' said Adolfo Quintero, an economist at the University of Panama. 'One of the elements of the crisis in other countries is unemployment.'

Government spending will be scrutinized this year as revenue is expected to drop, straining public coffers that have recently been in the black.

'I believe fiscal sustainability will be put to the test the next few years,' said Latorraca. 'The fiscal health the state has had in the last three or four years is a result of an important increase in income, not of discipline in expenditures.'

(Reporting by Sean Mattson; Editing by Dan Grebler) Keywords: PANAMA ECONOMY/

(R.Campbell@thomsonreuters.com; +52 55 5282 7142; Reuters Messaging: robert.campbell.reuters.com@reuters.net)

Monday, May 4, 2009

New Highway from Panama City to Colon Opens Today


Infrastructure Upgrades By Kathyria Caicedo for Telemetro Reporta - The new highway from Panama City to Colón will be officially opened today. The thousands of people who have to drive to Colón every day to work will be able to use the new route as of this afternoon. The new highway will be named after “Don Alberto Motta Cardoze" and will be opened this afternoon. According to official information from the secretary of State Communications, Erick Rodríguez Auerbach, the official first drive of the new highway will occur at 3:30 pm, but there will not be any official ceremony held.



Hoy, se dará la apertura de la Autopista Panamá-Colón

Por : Kathyria Caicedo

La carretera será una respuesta a las múltiples quejas de las malas condiciones en que está la carretera Boyd-Roosevelt. Foto/MOP

Hoy, será la apertura oficial al flujo vehicular de la Autopista Panamá-Colón. Así es, las cientos de personas que diariamente viajan a Colón podrán utilizar desde hoy esta nueva vía.

La carretera denominada “Don Alberto Motta Cardoze" estará habilitada desde horas de la tarde. Según informó, el Secretario de comunicación del Estado, Erick Rodríguez Auerbach, el recorrido oficial iniciará a las 3:30 p.m., no obstante aclaró que no se realizará ninguna ceremonia. A continuación sus declaraciones.

Thursday, April 2, 2009

Ivanka Trump: Panama Hottest Market

Ivanka Trump: Panama Hottest Market
2009-03-03
Latin Business Chronicle
BY JOACHIM BAMRUD

Ivanka Trump, executive vice president of development and acquisitions at U.S.-based Trump Organization, is bullish on Panama.



“I have projects all over the world [and] have a unique sense of the global real estate climate and submarkets,” she tells Latin Business Chronicle. “With great conviction, [I can say that] Panama is one of the strongest, if not the strongest, real estate market. Our biggest problem is not having enough inventory. We only have a small percent of the building left.”

ROBUST MARKET

The 70-story Trump Ocean Club is scheduled to open next year, offering a combination of condominiums, hotel, yacht club, restaurants, stores and a casino. “Given the global downturn, the fact that sales remain so robust a testament to the product, the brand and Panama,” Trump says. The buyers are a mix of American, Canadian and Latin Americans, she says.



The Trump success in Panama echoes the sentiments of other real estate experts. Property Frontiers recently named Panama as its top property hot spot for 2009, while David Berger, managing director for Latin America and the Caribbean for NAI Global, sees Panama as one two Latin American markets that will best weather the storm this year (the other being Brazil).



So what does Ivanka Trump see as the reasons for Panama’s success? “It’s got a great government that really supports developers,” she says. “I’m impressed with their forward thinking in bringing in new potential residents. I’m in New York and see as “escape to Panama”. I never saw that five years ago.”

TAX INCENTIVES

Panama also offers important tax incentives. “Some of the tax incentives are incredibly luring to international [investors], especially as we in America are being taxed to the hilt,” Trump says

Meanwhile, the $5.2 billion expansion of the Panama Canal is also generating strong growth, helping drive demand for real estate and other services.



And then there’s Panama’s combination of urban modernity and rural beauty. “Panama is an exceptionally diverse and beautiful country, with an urban and well-established

city in addition to gorgeous resort-type destinations,” she says.

The three-year old Punta Pacifica Hospital, affiliated with Johns Hopkins Medicine International, is also a big draw, Trump points out. It is located only a few minutes away from the Trump Ocean Club. And it doesn’t have the hurricanes of South Florida, while offering prices that are less expensive. “Panama is attracting [a] lot of baby boomers priced out of South Florida,” she says.

UNIQUE DESIGN



The Trump Ocean is being constructed in a market with plenty of luxury condominium offers, but Ivanka Trump believes it has been able to stand out thanks to its unique design and amenities, which include a private beach club at Isla Saboga in the Pearl Islands (of Survivor fame).

But the uniquely designed building is the main draw. “In terms of quality of construction it’s unlike anything Central America has seen,” she says. “It’s a beautiful building.” She especially singles out the pools and the large rooms and suites with all fixtures and amenities. “It’s a product that meets five star standard international levels,” Trump says.

And it will be managed by the Trump Organization. “We’ll be in Panama for many years after the building is ready,” she says.